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Networking Print in Shakespeare’s England

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Networking Print in Shakespeare’s England Synopsis

In Networking Print in Shakespeare's England, Blaine Greteman uses new analytical tools to examine early English print networks and the systemic changes that reshaped early modern literature, thought, and politics. In early modern England, printed books were a technology that connected people—not only readers and writers, but an increasingly expansive community of printers, publishers, and booksellers—in new ways. By pairing the methods of network analysis with newly available digital archives, Greteman aims to change the way we usually talk about authorship, publication, and print. As Greteman reveals, network analysis of the nearly 500,000 books printed in England before 1800 makes it possible to speak once again of a "print revolution," identifying a sudden tipping point at which the early modern print network became a small world where information could spread in new and powerful ways. Along with providing new insights into canonical literary figures like Milton and Shakespeare, data analysis also uncovers the hidden histories of key figures in this transformation who have been virtually ignored. Both a primer on the power of network analysis and a critical intervention in early modern studies, the book is ultimately an extended meditation on agency and the complexity of action in context.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9781503615243
Publication date: 17th August 2021
Author: Blaine Greteman
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 256 pages
Series: Stanford Text Technologies
Genres: Literature: history and criticism
Literary studies: c 1600 to c 1800
Literary studies: plays and playwrights